Mike Frasco
Monday, November 8, 2010
Central Passage in Ch. 1
Monday, September 27, 2010
Self-Reliance
Friday, September 17, 2010
Response to Housekeeping Discussion
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Hawskypng Literrairey Tradishin
It must be said that the entirety of this response depends on the subjective and controversial definition of the American literary tradition. The basis of this essay on the American Literary Tradition of Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping will be supported by the views of T.S. Elliot in “Tradition and the Individual Talent” and Ralph Waldo Emerson in “The American Scholar”.
Elliot states that in order to be traditional, a writer must have a “feeling that the whole if literature... of his own country… has a simultaneous existence and composes a simultaneous order” (Elliot 1). Only by knowing where he stands in “relation to the dead poets and artists” can a writer achieve significance (Elliot 1). Because of the inescapable reality that others have come before him, a writer must consider and react to existing literature. A writer can truly benefit from developing a “historical sense” and knowing what has come before him (Elliot 1).
However, contemplating the past does not mean copying the works of others. “Novelty is better than repetition” (Elliot 1). In order to gain true significance in the literary tradition, a writer must study “the views, which Cicero, which Locke, which Bacon, have give” but understand that these views are “nothing but to inspire” (Emerson 3). The writer must know about the views of the men before him and then form his own ideas and opinions. The most important attribute is the ability to produce originally.
On the basis of this definition of literary tradition, Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping fits in perfectly. Robinson provides a completely new perspective on the extensively explored topic of the American hero. In the novels before her, the American hero has usually been male but Robinson broadens that one-sided definition by portraying a female protagonist. Instead of having a strict set of convictions that lead him to glory, Robinson’s hero defies the typical portrayal of a hero. Through Ruth, Robinson suggests that a hero is one who defies social conventions, with or without a set of morals herself. By means of Ruth’s decision to forgo the standards of Fingerbone and become a transient with Sylvie, Robinson argues that heroism is individualism and the freedom to travel the open frontier. This new heroic behavior is illustrated when Ruth decides to skip school, when she breaks away from Lucille’s attempt to change her, and symbolically when Ruth walks blindly over the bridge and away from normal society.
Robinson is successful in contributing to the American literary tradition because her novel provides an original viewpoint on a historic topic. Through Housekeeping’s different standpoint, Robinson has altered and added to the vast literary past about American heroes. This is what Elliot and Emerson would argue is the basis of literary tradition —employing the ideas of previous writers to inspire new and original pieces of art. Robinson adopted the ideas of so many writers before her and wrote from her own perspective. The ideas of Housekeeping are derived from the past, but what makes Housekeeping a part of the literary tradition is the new contemporary spin that Robinson provides.
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
The Raven: Rhetorical Analysis
In his essay “The Philosophy of Composition”, Edgar Allen Poe provides a complete account of the steps he took in writing his most famous poem “The Raven”. When describing how he begins the process for each of his pieces, Poe said that he “prefers commencing with the consideration of an effect”. The effect is the focal point for the rest of the poem. The purpose of “The Raven” then became to use the chosen effect of beauty to “excite the sensitive soul to tears”. To do this, Poe employs rhetorical devices to allow the reader to sympathize with the protagonist’s situation before the poem’s end, where the protagonist, along with the reader, is then emotionally devastated.
Because “The Raven” is a poem and not a more formal piece of writing, Poe only utilizes pathos as a means of connecting with the reader; Poe’s artwork is completely an emotional experience. Immediately, Poe helps the reader identify with the protagonist through the description of the emotions that the bereaved lover is experiencing. He portrays the protagonist as lacking sleep and filled with pain and sorrow over his loss. The lover is “weak and weary” but is still awake at midnight in “bleak December” examining Lenore’s book collection. This paints a picture of a man that is very heart broken. Furthermore, when the protagonist opens his chamber door, hoping to see Lenore on the other side, Poe displays the longing that the lover has for his deceased maiden.
By illustrating the protagonist as heart broken, Poe achieves two critical goals in the process of leaving as big an effect as possible on the reader. First, he establishes a feeling of pity for the protagonist. After discovering of all the pain that the lover has already gone through, no reader will want the protagonist to experience any more tragedy. Second, Poe appeals to the reader’s sympathetic side to ensure that the reader feels emotionally invested in the protagonist. Poe assumes that nearly all of the readers will have dealt with some sort of loss in their life and that the emotions they felt are similar to those of the bereaved lover. By having something in common with the protagonist, the reader is expected to sympathize with the protagonist and ultimately feel closer to the character as an actual person. This connection between the emotions of the lover and the emotions of the reader allows Poe to create a much more powerful effect at the conclusion of the poem. Because the reader is now invested in the situation of the protagonist, any pain that the protagonist feels will also be felt by the reader. The reader will be more shocked, more saddened, and more effected by the conclusion of the poem because Poe has employed pity and sympathy to make the reader more involved in the poem.
Through this emotional technique, Poe has successfully established a bond between the protagonist and the reader. Thus, Poe has made it easier to accomplish the goal of the entire poem, which was to “excite the sensitive soul to tears.” When the raven reveals that the soul of the protagonist will remain on the floor and never be lifted into heaven, the reader is greatly affected. The reader shares the tragedy of the protagonist more significantly. There is even a slight moment where the reader wonders if something like this could ever happen to them. All of this was possible because of the rhetorical technique that Poe employs at the beginning of the poem.